Annie
Annie
“It was British scientists of the time, however, that decided, with a beautiful level of verbosity, that: “Aluminium, for so we shall take the liberty of writing the word, in preference to aluminum, which has a less classical sound.” For the US spelling + pronunciation, we can blame... annie.micro.blog
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maique
maique

@Annie Loved reading the linked article. I always assumed it was just that quoted "American arrogance", and enjoyed learning about it. Thanks.

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gregmoore
gregmoore

@Annie Today I learned that aluminum and aluminium are actually two different words and not an accent. Thanks for that. Language is fun.

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JohnBrady
JohnBrady

@Annie This brought back a childhood memory: There was a kids' cartoon show in the 1950s ("Ruff & Reddy" I think) where the protagonists went to an all-robot planet called Munimula, which (as they told us) is "Aluminum" spelled backwards. I thought that was so cool...

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gregmoore
gregmoore

@maique No, American arrogance is "nuculur" instead of nuclear.😜

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annahavron
annahavron

@Annie Thanks for this engaging post!

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maique
maique

@gregmoore 🤣🤣🤣

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cliffordbeshers
cliffordbeshers

@gregmoore Do people who say "nuculur" also say "nuculus" for "nucleus"?

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Parag
Parag

@cliffordbeshers These are the same people who say 'aks' for 'ask'.

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cliffordbeshers
cliffordbeshers

@parag I'm not sure about that. Ask versus Aks or Ax has cultural significance and a long history

The origins of "nuclear" are more recent, but older than I expected: 1704 seems to be the origin, from the early days of exploring the structure of cells.

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pratik
pratik

@cliffordbeshers @parag Agree. I too learned late about these cultural aspects. We may have noticed Bennie Thompson, the Chair of the Jan 6th Committee also say 'aks'.

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gregmoore
gregmoore

@cliffordbeshers Good question as it seems to be an American southern accent thing that drives it.

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the
the

@parag Or “eck cetera” for “et cetera”?

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In reply to
Annie
Annie

@maique I feel like American arrogance may still have something to do with it. 🙄

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Annie
Annie

@gregmoore Yay language is fun! I love these little tidbits too.

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Annie
Annie

@JMaxB What a fun memory, and clever naming -- obviously stuck, since you remember it!

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Annie
Annie

@annahavron You're welcome, glad you liked it

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Annie
Annie

@gregmoore @maique OH DEAR LORD SAVE US

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Annie
Annie

@gregmoore @cliffordbeshers Also very Midwest - perhaps only more Southern or rural Midwest. I've heard versions from MS to MO.

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Annie
Annie

@pratik @cliffordbeshers @parag Important distinction: mispronunciation versus cultural- or regional-specific pronunciation.

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crossingthethreshold
crossingthethreshold

@Annie Thank you, I learnt something this morning.

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Annie
Annie

@crossingthethreshold me too!

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Rongwrong
Rongwrong

@Annie When I was growing up in the St. Louis area the white people I knew said “ask” and most black people I knew said “aks.” There at least it was an ethnic and also a class thing. Middle-class blacks said “ask.”

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